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1.
A.P. Farkas  F. Solymosi 《Surface science》2006,600(11):2355-2363
The adsorption and surface reactions of propyl iodide on clean and potassium-modified Mo2C/Mo(1 0 0) surfaces have been investigated by thermal desorption spectroscopy (TPD), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS) in the 100-1200 K temperature range. This work is strongly related to the better understanding of the catalytic effect of Mo2C in the conversion of hydrocarbons. Potassium was found to be an effective promoter: it induced the rupture of C-I bond in the adsorbed C3H7I even at 100 K. The extent of C-I bond scission varied approximately linearly with the concentration of K coverage at the adsorption temperature of 100 K. As revealed by HREELS and TPD measurements the primary products of the dissociation are C3H7 and I. The former one was stabilized by potassium and underwent dehydrogenation and hydrogenation to give propene and propane. The desorption of both compounds is reaction-limited process. A fraction of propyl groups was converted into di-σ-bonded propene, which was stable up to ∼380 K. The coupling reaction of propyl species was also facilitated by potassium and resulted in the formation of hexane and hexene with Tp ∼ 230-250 K. Hydrogen was released with Tp = 390 K, indicative of a desorption limited process. The effect of potassium was explained by the extended electron donation to adsorbed propyl iodide in one hand, and by the direct interaction between potassium and I on the other hand. This was reflected by the shift of the desorption of potassium from the coadsorbed layer at and above 1.0 ML to higher temperature, and by the coincidal Tp values (∼700 K) of potassium and iodine. The formation of KI was also supported by the appearance of a loss feature at 650 cm−1 in the HREEL spectra attributed to a phonon mode of KI.  相似文献   

2.
Zhenjun Li 《Surface science》2007,601(8):1898-1908
The formation of alloys by adsorbing gold on a Pd(1 1 1) single crystal substrate and subsequently annealing to various temperatures is studied in an ultrahigh vacuum by means of Auger and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The nature of the alloy surface is probed by CO chemisorption using temperature-programmed desorption and reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy. It is found that gold grows in a layer-by-layer fashion on Pd(1 1 1) at 300 K, and starts to diffuse into the bulk after annealing to above ∼600 K. Alloy formation results in a ∼0.5 eV binding energy decrease of the Au 4f XPS signals and a binding energy increase of the Pd 3d features of ∼0.8 eV, consistent with results obtained for the bulk alloy. The experimentally measured CO desorption activation energies and vibrational frequencies do not correlate well with the surface sites expected from the bulk alloy composition but are more consistent with significant preferential segregation of gold to the alloy surface.  相似文献   

3.
Feng Gao 《Surface science》2007,601(15):3276-3288
The adsorption of alanine is studied on a Pd(1 1 1) surface using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD). It is found that alanine adsorbs into the second and subsequent layers prior to completion of the first monolayer for adsorption at ∼250 K, while at ∼300 K, alanine adsorbs almost exclusively into the first monolayer with almost no second-layer adsorption. Alanine adsorbs onto the Pd(1 1 1) surface in its zwitterionic form, while the multilayer contains about 30-35% neutral alanine, depending on coverage. Alanine is thermally stable on the Pd(1 1 1) surface to slightly above room temperature, and decomposes almost exclusively by scission of the CCOO bond to desorb CO2 and CO from the COO moiety, and the remaining fragment yields ethylamine and HCN.  相似文献   

4.
The adsorption and desorption of (2,4-dimethylpentadienyl)(ethylcyclopentadienyl)Ru [DER] on polycrystalline Ta have been studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD). DER exposures to Ta at 140 K result in primarily molecular adsorption and desorption, while a minor surface reaction occurs at defect sites. Monolayer DER desorbs between 278 and 297 K with increasing coverage, exhibiting a first order, zero coverage desorption energy of 2.3 eV. Multilayer DER desorbs between 272 and 263 K, most likely with fractional order kinetics, and exhibits a zero coverage desorption energy of 0.9 eV. XPS Ru 3d binding energies increase with increasing coverage due to core hole screening in the monolayer regime and increasing sample charging as the DER overlayer becomes thicker in the multilayer regime. DER exhibits a three-dimensional (3D) “hit and stick” growth mode in which random 3D structures form due to the lack of adsorbate mobility at 140 K. DER exposures to Ta between 298 and 773 K result in minor decomposition resulting primarily in adsorbed hydrocarbon species on the surface. When the Ta is pre-covered with atomic iodine, DER dissociation is significantly decreased while adsorption is increased.  相似文献   

5.
The adsorption of carbon monoxide is studied on Au/Pd(1 0 0) alloys by means of reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD). The alloy was formed by adsorbing a four-monolayer thick gold film on a Pd(1 0 0) substrate and by heating to various temperatures to form alloys with a range of palladium coverages. The alloy was characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and the composition of the outermost layer measured using low-energy ion scattering spectroscopy. CO adsorbs on palladium bridge sites only for palladium coverages greater than 0.5 monolayers (ML) suggesting that next-nearest neighbor sites are preferentially populated by palladium atoms. CO adsorbs on atop palladium sites and desorbs at ∼350 K corresponding to a desorption activation energy of ∼117 kJ/mol. However, at lower palladium coverages, these sites are not occupied and CO desorption states are detected 170 and 112 K corresponding to desorption activation energies of ∼53 kJ/mol and ∼35 kJ/mol, respectively, for these states. It is suggested that these states are due to a restructuring of the surface to form low-coordination gold sites that obscure the atop palladium site.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of CO on Au(3 1 0) and Au(3 2 1) was studied using a combination of thermal desorption spectroscopy and high resolution core level photoemission spectroscopy. These vicinal Au surfaces both have 6-fold coordinated atoms at the step edges but have a different terrace structure. The CO adsorption behavior was found to be very similar for both surfaces. Three different desorption peaks due to chemisorbed CO were identified, which desorb around 100 K(α), 120 K(β) and 180 K(γ), respectively. The C1s and O1s spectra of the chemisorbed CO show a complex shake-up structure. Our experimental results indicate that CO only adsorbs on the step atoms. The different desorption peaks are explained by substrate-mediated long-range interactions between the adsorbates. Comparison with literature results shows that the CO adsorption energy is not only dependent on the coordination number of the Au atoms, but that the exact geometrical structure of the surface also plays a role.  相似文献   

7.
V2O3(0 0 0 1) films have been grown epitaxially on Au(1 1 1) and W(1 1 0). Under typical UHV conditions these films are terminated by a layer of vanadyl groups as has been shown previously [A.-C. Dupuis, M. Abu Haija, B. Richter, H. Kuhlenbeck, H.-J. Freund, V2O3(0 0 0 1) on Au(1 1 1) and W(1 1 0): growth, termination and electronic structure, Surf. Sci. 539 (2003) 99]. Electron irradiation may remove the oxygen atoms of this layer. H2O adsorption on the vanadyl terminated surface and on the reduced surface has been studied with thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), vibrational spectroscopy (IRAS) and electron spectroscopy (XPS) using light from the BESSY II electron storage ring in Berlin. It is shown that water molecules interact only weakly with the vanadyl terminated surface: water is adsorbed molecularly and desorbs below room temperature. On the reduced surface water partially dissociates and forms a layer of hydroxyl groups which may be detected on the surface up to T ∼ 600 K. Below ∼330 K also co-adsorbed molecular water is detected. The water dissociation products desorb as molecular water which means that they recombine before desorption. No sign of surface re-oxidation could be detected after desorption, indicating that the dissociation products desorb completely.  相似文献   

8.
S. Müllegger 《Surface science》2006,600(6):1290-1299
The adsorption and growth of ordered para-hexaphenyl (6P) films have been investigated both on clean and partially carbon pre-covered Au(1 1 1) single crystal surfaces by thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED) under ultra-high vacuum conditions. The existence of a distinct first and second monomolecular 6P layer that clearly separate from the multilayer regime, which comprise lying molecules with respect to the substrate surface, could be inferred from TDS. For both the 6P mono- and multilayer grown on pure Au(1 1 1) the desorption energies have been determined based on experimental TDS data. In particular, for the monolayer regime a coverage dependence of the desorption energy has been found, which is attributed to repulsive interactions between neighbouring 6P molecules adsorbed on the gold surface. The existence of well-ordered film structures could be inferred from LEED for half monolayer and full monolayer thick 6P films. Based on the LEED and TDS data, structural models are presented for these highly ordered organic films. Multi-step dehydrogenation of 6P molecules adsorbed on clean Au(1 1 1) surfaces is reported for temperatures above 650 K together with experimental evidence for the existence of a regular overlayer composed of partially dehydrogenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) intermediates. A quite different adsorption/desorption kinetics and film growth has been observed for 6P films grown on carbon pre-covered Au(1 1 1) surfaces.  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption and surface reactions of CH2I2 on the K-dosed Mo2C/Mo(1 0 0) have been studied by high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Potassium is an effective promoter for the rupture of C-I bond in the adsorbed CH2I2. A partial dissociation of this compound occurred even at 100 K and was completed at 190 K at monolayer K coverage. The dissociation was further promoted by the illumination of coadsorbed layer at 100 K. As revealed by HREELS and XPS measurements the primary products of the dissociation are CH2 and I. Methylene was converted to π-bonded ethylene characterized by Tp = 160 K, and di-σ-ethylene with Tp = 350 K. Other products of the surface reaction are hydrogen and methane. The coupling reaction of CH2 species was clearly facilitated by potassium. The effect of potassium was explained by the extended electron donation to adsorbed alkyl iodide in one hand, and by the direct interaction between potassium and I on the other hand.  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption of naphthalene, vacuum deposited on a Ag(1 0 0) surface, was comprehensively investigated by means of low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), temperature-programmed thermal desorption (TPD) spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and polarization-dependent near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectroscopy in the mono- and multilayer regime. A growth of long-range ordered monolayer at 140 K is observed with LEED. The polarization-dependent C 1s NEXAFS shows that the naphthalene molecules in the monolayer lie almost parallel to the Ag(1 0 0) surface. With increasing film thickness, the molecular orientation turns to upright position. Furthermore, NEXAFS measurements show that in the multilayer regime the molecular orientation depends on the substrate temperature during deposition.  相似文献   

11.
Due to the discovery of Au as a catalyst for low temperature CO oxidation, the adsorption of CO on Au surfaces has attracted a lot of attention recently. On stepped and rough single crystal surfaces as well as on deposited particles two characteristic desorption states above 100 K have been observed via TPD. We have studied Au deposits on graphite in order to elucidate the nature of these desorption peaks in more detail. For this purpose, Au was deposited at 100 K and 300 K on HOPG as a weakly interacting support. In analogy to other supports, we obtain two desorption states (∼140 K and ∼170 K) whose relative intensities depend strongly on the deposition temperature with the high temperature peak being much more pronounced for the 100 K deposits. After annealing to 600 K, both states drastically lose intensity. XP spectra, on the other hand, show virtually no decrease of the Au 4f intensity as would be expected for desorption or significant changes of the particle morphologies. We conclude that both desorption peaks are defect-related and connected with under-coordinated Au atoms that are lost for the most part upon annealing. These sites could be located at the perimeter of dendritic islands or on small, defect-rich particles in addition to larger particles not adsorbing CO at 100 K. Preliminary STM results are in favour of the second interpretation.  相似文献   

12.
The adsorption and desorption of sulphur on the clean reconstructed Au(1 1 0)-(1 × 2) surface has been studied by low energy electron diffraction, Auger electron spectroscopy and temperature programmed desorption. The results obtained show a complex behaviour of the S/Au(1 1 0) system during sulphur desorption at different temperatures. Two structures of the stable ordered sulphur overlayer on the Au(1 1 0) surface, p(4 × 2) and c(4 × 4), were found after annealing the S/Au(1 1 0) system at 630 K and 463 K, respectively. The corresponding sulphur coverage for these overlayers was estimated by AES signal intensity analysis of the Au NOO and S LMM Auger lines to be equal to 0.13 ML and 0.2 ML, respectively. Both sulphur structures appear after removing an excess of sulphur, which mainly desorbs at 358 K as determined from TPD spectra. Furthermore, it was not possible to produce the lower coverage p(4 × 2) sulphur structure by annealing the c(4 × 4) surface. In the case of the p(4 × 2) S overlayer on the Au(1 1 0)-(1 × 2) surface it is proposed that the sulphur is attached to “missing row” sites only. The c(4 × 4) S overlayer arises via desorption of S2 molecules that are formed on the surface due to mobility of sulphur atoms after a prolonged anneal.  相似文献   

13.
Z. Li 《Surface science》2007,601(5):1351-1357
The adsorption of acetic acid is studied as a function of gold content by temperature-programmed desorption and reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy on Au/Pd(1 1 1) alloys formed by depositing 5 ML of gold onto a Pd(1 1 1) surface and heating to various temperatures. For mole fractions of gold greater than ∼0.5, acetic acid adsorbs molecularly and desorbs intact with an activation energy of ∼52 kJ/mol. This acetic acid is present as catemers, where the nature of the catemer is found to depend on gold concentration. When the relative gold concentration is less than ∼0.33, adsorption of acetic acid at 80 K and heating to ∼207 K forms η1-acetate species on the surface. On further heating, these can either thermally decompose to eventually evolve hydrogen, water and oxides of carbon, or form η2-acetate species, where the coverage of reactively formed η2-acetate species increases with decreasing gold concentration in the near surface region.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption and reactions of trans-1,2-dichloroethene on Cu(1 1 0) have been investigated using reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy, temperature programmed desorption and molecular beam adsorption reaction spectroscopy. These data reveal that the behaviour of the system is critically affected by temperature and can be described in terms of three main regimes: Regime I, which occurs over 85-165 K, represents molecular adsorption in the monolayer and the multilayer where the trans-1,2-dichloroethene adsorbs with its molecular plane oriented largely parallel to the metal surface; Regime II, extending over the temperature range 170-280 K, is dominated by desorption/dechlorination events which are first initiated at 171 K, then poisoned rapidly and re-initiated at the much higher temperature of 263 K, culminating in the creation of adsorbed acetylene and Cl atoms on the surface; Regime III, spanning the temperature range of 280-500 K, is governed by the behaviour of the C2H2 molecular intermediate at the surface which, if created at low temperatures, trimerises to form benzene that subsequently desorbs. However, when created at high temperature, direct desorption of C2H2 competes effectively with the trimerisation process.  相似文献   

15.
Methylidyne (CH) was prepared on Pt(1 1 1) by three methods: thermal decomposition of diiodomethane (CH2I2), ethylene decomposition at temperatures above 450 K, and surface carbon hydrogenation. Methylidyne and its precursors are characterized by reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS). The C-I bond of diiodomethane breaks upon adsorption to produce methylene (CH2), which decomposes to methylidyne at temperatures above 130 K. Above 200 K, methylidyne is the only hydrocarbon species observed with RAIRS, although reaction channels for the formation of methane (CH4) and ethylene (C2H4) are indicated by temperature programmed desorption (TPD). As is well known from numerous previous studies, ethylene decomposes to ethylidyne (CCH3) upon exposure to Pt(1 1 1) at 410 K. Upon annealing to 450 K, ethylidyne dissociates through two reaction pathways, dehydrogenation to ethynyl (CCH) and C-C bond scission to methylidyne. Ethylene dehydrogenation on the surface at 750 K and under low ethylene exposures produces surface carbon that can be hydrogenated to methylidyne with C-H and C-D stretch frequencies of 2956 and 2206 cm−1, respectively. Hydrogen co-adsorption on the surface causes these frequencies to shift to higher values. Methylidyne is stable on Pt(1 1 1) to temperatures up to 500 K.  相似文献   

16.
The thermal chemistry of diiodomethane on Ni(1 1 0) single-crystal surfaces was studied by temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Diiodomethane was chosen as a precursor for the formation of methylene surface species. I 3d and C 1s XPS data indicated that, indeed, adsorbed diiodomethane undergoes the C-I bond dissociations needed for that transformation, and detection of iodomethane production in TPD experiments pointed to the stepwise nature of those reactions. Significant amounts of methane are produced from further thermal activation of the chemisorbed methylene groups. This involves surface hydrogen, both coadsorbed from background gases and produced by dehydrogenation of some of the adsorbed diiodomethane, and can be induced at temperatures as low as about 160 K, right after the C-I bond breaking steps. Unique to this system is the detection of significant amounts, up to 10% of the total CH2I2 adsorbed, of heavier hydrocarbons, including ethene, ethane, propene, propane, and butene. Deuterium labeling experiments were used to provide support for a mechanism where the initial hydrogenation of some adsorbed methylene to methyl moieties is followed by a rate-limiting methylene insertion step to yield ethyl intermediates. Facile subsequent β-hydride elimination and reductive elimination with coadsorbed hydrogen account for the formation of ethene and ethane, respectively, while a second and third methylene insertions lead to C3 and C4 production. Based on the final product distribution, the methylene insertion was estimated to be approximately 20 times slower than the following hydrogenation-dehydrogenation reactions. Normal kinetic isotope effects were observed for most of the hydrogenation and dehydrogenation reactions involved.  相似文献   

17.
Feng Gao 《Surface science》2007,601(17):3579-3588
The surface chemistry of proline is explored on Pd(1 1 1) using a combination of temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Proline adsorbs on Pd(1 1 1) at temperatures of 250 K and below into second and subsequent layers prior to the saturation of the first layer, where approximately 70% of the adsorbed proline is present in its zwitterionic form. Molecular proline desorbs between ∼315 K and ∼333 K depending on coverage. When adsorbed at ∼300 K, only the first monolayer is formed, and the proline is present as zwitterions, oriented such that all of the carbons are detected equally by XPS. Proline decomposes by scission of the C-COO bond, where the carboxylate moiety desorbs as carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide, while the nitrogen-containing moiety desorbs as to HCN, and evolves pyrrole at ∼390 K, pyrrolidine at ∼410 K, and final species that desorbs at ∼450 K that cannot be unequivocally assigned but may be 2-butenenitrile (CH3-CHCH-CN), 3-butenenitrile (CH2CH-CH2-CN), 2-methyl-2-propenenitrile (CH2C(CH3)-CN) or cyclopropanecarbonitrile.  相似文献   

18.
The adsorption and reaction of vinyl acetate with the clean Pd(1 1 0) surface has been investigated using temperature programmed desorption and molecular beam reaction measurements. These show that, under low pressure conditions, the main reaction pathway above 400 K is total dehydrogenation to yield hydrogen and carbon dioxide in the gas phase, and surface carbon. This occurs at a steady state, notwithstanding the fact that carbon is being deposited continuously onto the surface. The reaction continues because the vast majority of this carbon is lost from the surface to the bulk of the sample. Between about 320-380 K the reaction profile is somewhat different; the molecule dissociates at the CH3COOCHCH2 bond, producing the most stable intermediate, the acetate, and the reaction stops after the build-up of adsorbed acetate and surface carbonaceous species. At ∼300 K, the products are very similar to those for acetaldehyde adsorption (namely, methane, CO and some surface carbon), and they evolve in a non-steady state manner due to the build up of adsorbed CO on the surface. Thus the mechanism is dominated here by dissociation at the CH3COOCHCH2 bond, and formation of the acetyl intermediate. Consideration is given to the connection between these data and vinyl acetate synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
An ultra-thin alumina layer grown on Cu-9at.%Al (1 1 1) surface was studied using synchrotron radiation photoelectron spectroscopy (SRPES), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). By deconvolving SRPES spectra of the Al 2p doublet, four components belonging to metallic as well as oxide phases were recognized. Pd-Au alloy formation was confirmed by SRPES measurement during Pd and Au deposition. The study of the system's thermal stability reveals diffusion of Pd and Au atoms through the alumina layer. While Au atoms start to diffuse under the alumina layer at 670 K, Pd atoms are forming Pd-Al surface alloy at this temperature. The diffusion of Pd atoms through alumina occurs when sample was heated over 770 K. Alumina layer was stable even after heating the sample at 870 K, but its structure was corrupted probably due to the diffusion of metal atoms.  相似文献   

20.
Y.-N. Sun  H.-J. Freund 《Surface science》2009,603(20):3099-10094
We studied CO adsorption on Pt particles deposited on well-ordered Fe3O4(1 1 1) thin films grown on Pt(1 1 1) by temperature programmed desorption (TPD). A highly stepped Pt(1 1 1) surface produced by ion sputtering and annealing at 600 K was studied for comparison. Structural characterization was performed by scanning tunneling microscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy. The TPD spectra revealed that in addition to the desorption peaks at ∼400 and 480 K, assigned to CO adsorbed on Pt(1 1 1) facets and low-coordination sites respectively, the Pt nanoparticles annealed at 600 K exhibit a desorption state at ∼270 K. This state is assigned to initial stages of strong metal support interaction resulting in partial Fe-Pt intermixing. On both Pt/Fe3O4(1 1 1) and stepped Pt(1 1 1) surfaces CO is found to dissociate at 500 K. The results suggest that CO dissociation and carbon accumulation occur on the low-coordinated Pt sites.  相似文献   

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